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[1] Its majority stockholder is 20 Min Holding, a leader in free daily newspapers in Switzerland (20 minutes in French and 20 Minuten in German), France , and Spain. 20 Min Holding's majority stockholder is Schibsted, a Norwegian communication group that was founded in 1839, listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange, and has a strong presence in Norway ...
Das Erste (German: [das ˈʔeːɐ̯stə]; "The First") is the flagship national television channel of the ARD association of public broadcasting corporations in Germany. Das Erste is jointly operated by the nine regional public broadcasting corporations that are members of the ARD. [1]
20 minutes (French pronunciation: [vɛ̃ minyt]) is a French-language newspaper published in Switzerland, launched on 8 March 2006 by Tamedia for the Romandie. [1] It is a free tabloid that gets revenue from advertising. [2] As of 2008, it had a circulation of 221,560.
20 Minuten is published in tabloid format. Since 2005 the newspaper has been owned by Express-Zeitung AG , which is jointly owned by Tamedia (majority holding) and Berner Zeitung (17.5%). In the German-speaking parts of Switzerland , specific editions are made for the regions of Basel , Bern , Lucerne , St. Gallen and Zürich .
20 minutes may refer to: 20 minutes, a newspaper; 20 ... 20 Min, a song by American Rapper Lil Uzi Vert This page was last edited on 19 ...
RTL aktuell is a German television news programme broadcast on the commercial station RTL.The main 20-minute bulletin airs every evening at 18:45 CET, supplemented by a breakfast news bulletin (Punkt 6, Punkt 7, and Punkt 8 formerly Guten Morgen Deutschland), a lunchtime magazine programme (Punkt 12), a daily short news programme in the afternoon (RTL News), a news magazines (RTL Direkt) and a ...
20 minutes (pronounced [vɛ̃ minyt] vingt minutes) is a free, daily newspaper aimed at commuters in France. It is published by Rossel and Ouest-France Group [ fr ] . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] 20 minutos , the Spanish version, is distributed by Schibsted and Zeta in Spain .
On 1 April 1992, Deutsche Welle inherited the RIAS-TV broadcast facilities, using them to start a German- and English-language television channel broadcast via satellite, DW-TV, adding a short Spanish broadcast segment in November of the same year. In 1995 it began 24-hour operation (12 hours German, 10 hours English, 2 hours Spanish).